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  • Talking points a range of topical issues tackled by academics 22 28 October

    Dr Jonna Nyman from the Department of Politics and International Relations has written an article for the Leicester Mercury discussing Britain's complicated relationship with China. Read the full article 'Scolding China in public is unlikely to work.

  • Management Professor presents research to NHS employers

    The School of Management’s Stephen Wood, Professor of Management, speaking at the NHS Employers Autumn Workforce Summit at the Royal College of Surgeons, London, on 13 October, stressed that employee involvement can simultaneously improve both patient outcomes and efficiency...

  • Diwali celebrations come to the Students Union

    The Students’ Union has announced its line-up for this year’s Diwali Day on Wednesday 11 November 2015.

  • The death penalty and international anti-drug operations

    A human rights campaigner is to speak at our University on how European Union support for anti-drug operations internationally should change in light of the increased use of the death penalty for drug offences.

  • Leicester cited in Parliamentary debate on world-class impact of UK science

    Our University has been cited for the world-class impact of its work in a Parliamentary debate on Treasury Support for UK Science.

  • Infants under 12 months most at risk of physical abuse

    Research co-authored by a Professor from our University has found infants under the age of 12 months are most at risk of serious physical abuse. The large study of severely injured children is published online in Emergency Medicine Journal.

  • Documentary highlights how humans created an artificial planet Earth

    The impact humans have had on planet Earth and how we have created an ‘artificial' planet will be explored in a new documentary by an award-winning journalist featuring Professor Jan Zalasiewicz (pictured) from the Department of Geology.

  • Link between inherited DNA sequences and heart disease identified

    A study to examine recessively inherited genome-wide DNA sequences has for the first time discovered a potential link with Britain’s biggest killer – Coronary Artery Disease (CAD).

  • New insights into how asthma pathways could be blocked revealed

    Researchers have discovered new insights into how asthma may be caused, by identifying three distinct groups of asthma patients characterised by the activity of different genes in an individual’s airways.

  • Study finds veins on Mars were formed by evaporating ancient lakes

    Mineral veins found in Mars’s Gale Crater were formed by the evaporation of ancient Martian lakes, a new study has shown.

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